#36: Kurt Vonnegut
Rank: Private, United States Army
Duration: 3 Years
Delving into the depths of human experience, Kurt Vonnegut’s seminal work “Slaughterhouse-Five” offers a haunting glimpse into the horrors of war. Many may not realize that Vonnegut’s powerful storytelling was deeply rooted in his harrowing experiences as a prisoner of war during World War II.

Enlisting in the Army, Vonnegut found himself among a group of men captured by German forces and transported to a prison camp aboard a boxcar train. It was only through the intervention of General Patton’s forces, liberating Leipzig, that Vonnegut and his comrades found their long-awaited freedom. This ordeal would profoundly shape his literary perspective for years to come.